Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1999, Side 84

Jökull - 01.12.1999, Side 84
ing with cutting faults (including inverted faults in a rotational position). At the same time, deposition of a package of deposits of reservoir sedimentation oc- curred (Figure 13: 3, Ji) on the southern side of the kettle in a crack between the iceberg and the basic di- amicton. (c) basic diamicton (H), with many boulders and coarse gravel is the main lithofacies set filling up the kettle. It comes from the ablation of the moraine load contained in the ice and occurs across the whole width of the kettle, although it is thickest (2.1 m) at its sides. Layer H forms a circular rim (ring) of di- amicton around the kettle at a depth of 1 m and lies on top of a fluvioglacial shelf (C) in its northem part. We are not aware of other researchers having recognized such rounded forms and therefore claim that we have discovered a new type of rimmed kettle. In cross-section, both the internal and extemal slopes of the rim mound are steep. The sediments of the external slope are in contact with the sandur de- posits, while the internal slope was formed by grav- itational processes, i.e. downwards displacement of younger sediments. Deformational structures occur in the root of the rim, e.g. small folds of sand in the diamicton, and rotational microfolds. Thus the inter- nal structure of the rim ridges indicates that they are not exclusively formed by gravitational scattering of material but also by consolidation and deformation in their root zone. Further deposition of younger sandur deposits (D) marks the beginning of the second evolutionary phase of the kettle, changing it from a rimmed kettle to a more normal looking one. Further deposits of vari- grained sands with diamicton (I) gradually fill the kettle (Figure 13: 4-6). Three separate phases could be distinguish on the northern side of the kettle. A lower section (L) composed of sandy diamicton with a continuous layer of undulationally disturbed fine sand at its bottom, a middle section (I2), composed of sandy diamicton with numerous lenticles and irregular lumps of fine- and medium-grained sands exhibiting a torrent and involutional structure (Grzybowski, 1970), and a upper section (I3), composed of unlayered, vari- grained sands, gravel and small boulders. The thick- ness of these sections increases towards the centre of Figure 9. Geological structure of the bottom of kettle 16 and its immediate surroundings. — Þversnið af jökulkeri. the kettle opposite to the lower lithofacies complex. Fragments of the (I2) and (I3) sections which rep- resent a clear, integral extension of the fluvioglacial deposits which make up the surrounding sandur (D) are also deposited above the basic rim mound. The evolution of the normal type kettle is thus linked with sediment sinking and gentle gravitational flow on its northem side, as well as block displacement or sub- sidence on its southern side (Figures 10, 11A and 13: 4-5). The depression formed on the surface after the ice melted collected water temporarily, in which ac- cumulation of fine-grained deposits, silts and fine- and very fine-grained sands with the character of sediment from ice-dammed lakes took place (J2, J3). Section J formed in the kettle during the final sed- imentation period when the kettle was being morpho- logically shallowed by the deposition of fluvioglacial sediments (E). These sediments, deposited before the ultimate disappearance of the embedded ice remains do not extend to the southern edge of the kettle, i.e. level VI (Figures 10, 11A and 13: 6). DISCUSSION Maizels (1991; 1992) described rim-shaped, sur- face diamicton-boulder microforms created during the 1918 jökulhlaup on Mýrdalssandur. Fuller (1914) de- scribing similar forms in the state of New York, distin- guished three lithological types of rims; i.e. outwash 82 JÖKULL, No. 47
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